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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 15, 2018 4:00am-5:59am PST

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sunday, catch a new ncis los angeles on cbs. ♪ good morning, it's december 15, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." breaking overnight, a federal judge rules that obamacare is unconstitutional. we'll have the president's response and what the ruling may mean for those covered underhea. the president picks a newac. curren budget director mick mulvaney. details on his appointment and why many are confused about just how long he'll be in that role. decades of deception. a new report claims johnson and johnson knew that its baby
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powder sometimes contained asbestos which can cause we'll have the latest on the. fallout. nc plus it's an ambitious plan to help restore and clean one of the nation's busiest waterways. how some high school students are hoping to use 1 billion oysters to filter new york city's harbor. it's a new exhibit showcasing the folklore that inspired a magical empire. we'll have the back stories that led to the creation of harry potter. but we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. it's a troubling first judicial step. it's very disturbing to 12 million people who are on obamacare. >> a federal judge in texas rules obamacare is unconstitutional. >> wow, didn't see that coming. president trump writing, as i predicted all along, obamacare has been struck down as an unconstitutional disaster.
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>> obviously i'm celebrating with the president. this we believed from the very beginning was unconstitutional and we think the judge did the right thing. >> two jobs weren't enough for him so he needed to have one more. >> president trump has chosen mick mulvaney who heads the office of management and budget to become acting chief of staff. >> one of the things i love about mick is that he doesn't suffer fools gladly. >> johnson andons johnson sayin it's baby powder contained asbestos. a missing woman from woodland park. investigators now call the disappearance suspicious. >> i do think kelce's still alive? that's a possibility and our hope. an explosion that rips apart a box truck. >> the back all blown out. all that. >> a bumble porch pirate. a man got caught on camera stealing a 65 inch tv off a woman's front stoop. >> and all that matters. >> that's what christmas is all about. >> this story gets you in the holiday spirit. >> a man handed out 1-dollars
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bills to people who just pai attention to the homeless. >> kindness is a bridge between all people. so if you're ever down and want to lift yourself up, go do something kind for somebody. >> on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> but sadly, john, some people aren't having a holly, jolly christmas. the white house press corps, because donald trump has canceled the white house christmas party for the press. still, christmas for the trumps might not be that fun because apparently donald trump say serial re-gifter. >> i'm the namesake, so i got re-gifted all of the things that were monogrammed for him at times. >> i wonder who else he tried to re-gift on. somewhere out there danny treho is saying i thought he made this is saying i thought he made this special for me. captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend, everybody, i'm anthony mason along with michelle miller and adriana diaz who's in for dana
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jacobson. dana is on an aircraft error this weekend so she's more than safe, that's the good news. and we begin this morning with new uncertainty over the affordable care act, also known as obamacare, and the healthcare coverage of millions of americans. late friday night, a federal judge in texas ruled the law unconstitutional. >> but supporters of boehm care a -- obamacare are going to appeal the decision. as a result, a number of insurance groups, patient advocates and healthcare providers denounced the ruling. >> despite the apparent victory for the jump administratitrump they say it will remain in place while the issue plays out in court. kenneth krak joins us with the details. good morning. >> good morning to you. the affordable care act has stood up to prior legislative and legal challenges and has been upheld twice by the supreme cot. but the judge decided another landmark piece of legislation
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passed just last year and striking obamacare down this time. >> great for our country, great for the american people. thank you all. >> it has been nearly one year since president trump signed in law the tax cut bill passed with zero democratic votes in congress. and now one part of the legislation is impacting the future of the affordable care act. law eliminated the individual mandate, a penalty considered a tax by the supreme court for anyone who does not have health insurance. in a lawsuit backed by 19 republican attorneys general and one republican governor argues that since the penalty has been eliminated, obamacare is no longer constitutional. in a 55-page ruling, judge reed o'connor agreed writing the penalty can no longer be fairly read as an exercise of congress's tax power. reaction to the decision was swift. nancy pelosi who is locally to become speaker when democrats take control of the house next
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month, called the ruling absurd and promised to protect the affordable care act. meanwhile, in an interview on fox news, texas attorney general ken paxton touted the decision as a victory. he's one of the lawsuit's prominent bakers. >> we believed from the very beginning it was unconstitutional and the judge did the right thing. >> and president trump tweeted his satisfaction and called on congress to pass a new healthcare law. >> we're going to sign this bill. >> since president obama signed the affordable care act into law in 2010, about 20 million people have gained health insurance coverage. but the haw -- law has been frequently targeted by congress and the courts. president trump campaigned on the repeal act and came close. but it came up close when the late senator john mccain cast the decisive vote. >> they could pass legislation
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of its own keeping in place certain popular provisions of obamacare such as protecting coverage with patients for preexisting conditions, but a republican controlled senate and president trump of course would have to sign off on that. and one last note, today is the enrollment deadline for anyone seeking coverage under 8ed for able care act for 2019. anthony. >> thank you very much. for more on the ruling we turn to jesse weber. he's an attorney and amping ker on the law and crime network. good morning. >> good morning. first thing, for those who have coverage should they be worried right now? >> it's a concern. for right now the law stays in effect. nothing from a practical aspect will change in their lives. but they're waking up right before the enrollment and think what does that mean for the future? anybody that has a preexisting condition or relying on medicare or medicaid, that's a concern. because that law that they were relying on was just declared unconstitutional but has to make its way through the courts
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first. >> was this a surprise to % everyone? was that tax clause in that tax bill last year that was inserted, did anyone see this coming? >> i think they did. and i'll tell you why. because, and this is the argument from the court, right? if you take away the penalty, if people are not -- don't have to pay a fine for not getting health insurance, then what is an individual mandate really? it's unconstitutional. if you don't have that individual mandate, then what is the affordable care act? because it was all built on that penalty. and that's what the court said. it said you really can't have this. and we're a court, we can't create a new law and this is a new regulatory scheme. it would change the whole landscape. you have this law that doesn't have that penalty provision, there's no way it can stand. >> the supreme court has upheld the affordable care act twice before. if it gets back to the supreme court, the court looks different with brett kavanaugh on the bench so how do you think it will play out? >> we have a different court. it's a conservative majority. if you are an anti-obamacare
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person, if you're the architect of that, this is the prime time to get it repealed and replaced. the thing have though, it's also been decided on a very different issue. if you don't have that penalty provision, if you're not forcing people to buy it, to buy health insurance, then this makes sense for it to be overturned. the question is everybody who's a supporter of it they now have some leeway. they saw it with wh the judge ordered. they'll look at those arguments, they'll come back and make an argument going forward. it's not the end of the story, but this is not a good day for anybody that was relying on that. >> what's the timetable because if you've got the coverage you're wondering how much longer might i have it for? >> right. i would say nerve 2019 everybod would be okay. they can try to fast track it through the appeals court and fast track it through the supreme court because it's such a big issue. but i've seen this happen before. i'd be more concerned for people who are trying to think about in the future what they're going to do. and it's no guarantee that
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everybody in 2019 is protected, but i'm more curious about 2020, especially with the election. >> 130 million people with preexisting conditions. that's a biggie. >> and i've heard the administration say, look, we're going to try to do something to protect these people. congressional republicans are like we'll pass some sort of legislation to protect them. easier said than done. thankyou. president trump has chosen his budget director mick mulvaney to be his acting chief of. it's not clear how longta mffuly will stay on the job. he replaces john kelly who is leaving at the end of the year. throl barnett is at teerro wl,ehi good morning. >> reporter: good morning. look, president trump has been struggling to find a replacement for outgoing chief of staff john kelly. potential candidates have either withdrawn their names from consideration or declined the offer altogether. and complicating this search is newly revealed information about the president's role in paying hush money to two women who allege havin affair with
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g m. after aan week-long search for new chief of staff, president trump announced in a tweet he has chosen mick mulvaney, his current budget director ar ofnd consumer financial protection bureau now becomes president trump's acting white house chief of staff. the decision came hours after former new jersey governor and trump ally chris christie pulled his name out of running with this statement, quote, now is not the right time for me or my family to undertake this serious assignment. earlier in the week, several other candidates turned down the job citing family conflicts. a white house senior official denies reports mulvaney did not want the job. here's what he told cbs news about the prospect back in february. >> how badly do you want that job? >> i don't want that job. i love the jobs that i have now. >> mulvaney takes the reigns at a time when the white house is embroiled in scandals. and as new revolutions into the mueller investigation come to
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light. on wednesday, trump's former lawyer michael cohen was sentenced to three years in prison for crimes including arranging hush money payments to two women who claim to have had affairs with trump. in his plea agreement, cohen implicated the president in a felony. >> he directed me to make the payments. he directed me to become involved in these matters. >> and he knew it was >>wrnd h was doingon thatg? top his election? >> he -- you have to remember at what point inhis matter came about. two weeks or so before the election post the billy bush comments. so, yes, he was very concerned about how this would affect the >>eporter:reside trump >> ieverecharges direcelted.tion him to do anything wrong. whatever he did, he did on his own. he's a lawyer. a lawyer who represents a client is supposed to do the right thing, that's why you pay them a lot of money. >> reporter: also this week we've learned federal prosecutors are looking into how
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president trump's inaugural committee spent its money. at issue is how the $107 million raised was spent, if it was granted to those who were requiring or requesting political favors and if any of that money was, indeed, misspent. adriana. >> tailer, thanks. also breaking overnight, a powerful pacific storm battered the pacific northwest with high winds about the as many as 100,000 people lost power for a time on friday. in seattle, the winds sent a tree crash down on to a house. some streets and roa were blocked by fallen trees. more severe weather is expected in the west and in the east. favorite ccago stion of our wbb tve like that. well, we'll start with the rain that's off to the east coast here. we're watching this large system that's tracking to theast a that's
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ngainso southern illinois and all the way out to the southeast and up to washington, d.c. as well. we're particularly concerned about flooding that's possible because of the persistent rain and because of melting snow in this area. that's why we have flood watches and flash flood watches that are up for today. here's the way the system will track as we go into the afternoon today into tonight and into tomorrow bringing a mix of precipitation, rain, and snow up here to the north and finally into new england. now let's take one look out to the northwest. his is where we have high winds, high surf warnings, gale warnings, even a winter storm watch as more rain and snow with windy conditions come roaring in to the pacific northwest. anthony. >> some tough stuff out there. thanks, ed. the rough ride on wall street continued friday as the dow jones industrial average joined the other major indexes in correction territory. feelings of a global economic slowdown fueled the selloff.
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dow lost 2% to close at 24,100.t 's october. dow the nasdaq and s&p 500 each lost about 2% as well. the inspector general at the department of homeland security is launching an investigation into conditions at u.s. customs and patroollowi the ath of aoungr migradent girl b r from guatemala. the girl suffered from a high fever and was taken to a texas hospital after spending eight hours in u.s. custody. jeff pegues reports. >> reporter: she was taken into a hospital on the night of december 6th. according to the department of homeland security, an initial swrooeng screening of the young girl revealed no evidence of health issues, but the next morning as they prepared to board a bus to a border station, her father advised that the child was sick and vomiting.
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thatorder station was 95 miles away and that's the first time she received medical care. by then she wasn't breathing. emts revived her twice but her temperature soared to 105.9 degrees before she was airlifted to providence children's hospital in el paso where she died. homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen. >> it's heart wrenching is what it is and my heart goes out to the family, all of dhs. you know, this is just a very sad example of the dangers of this journey. >> reporter: immigrants often make the journey without food and water. between 2008 and 2017, 3,654 pe. still, a record 25,000 immigrants traveling as families were apprehended at the southern border in november. earlier this week, cbp commissioner kevin mcill laney testified that his agents aren't fully edwoipd handle the
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indplux. >> they were built to handle mostly male, single adults in custody, not families or children. >> reporter: u.s. customs and border patrol is conducting a review on its own, including looking into how it notifies the public when there's aeath i d wonndering why it took so for this 7-year-old's death to become public. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff pa gaegues, washington. >> we asked a mother, a lot of people said it's irresponsible to take your young children, her daughter was sick, on this kind of journey. she said it's more irresponsible to stay home when we can't even eat. >> you don't understand the difficult decisions these families are facing. >> tough. all right. in france, president emmanuel macron laid a white rose at the moumt in strasbou-- monument fo attack. it comes as police stepped up duties in paris as
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antigovernment protesters are back on the march. it's the fifth consecutive weekend yellow vest demonstrators are venting concerns about the economic inequality and overall anger with the government. roxana saberi is in paris this morning. roxana, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there's a heavy police presence here across the city as security forces try to prevent a repeat of the violent scene inis the past few weekends. artoday there have p been minor ufetsc beswe,000 penolice officers deployed in paris. so far, they outnumber the protesters. paris's police department says around 1,000 demonstrators are mo the streets of paris this rnigg,in scani weefiksly whennte protests set cars and barricades on fire and vandalized luxury stores. police used teargas and rubber bullets to control the crowds. the so-called yellow vests demonstrators began in november across the country to protest against an increase in fuel
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taxes. but the rallies morphed into a move meant against the high cost of living in france with some protesters calling on french president emmanuel macron to resign. on monday, the president tried to quell the demonstrations by promising to raise the minimum wage a by offering some tax breaks. he has also canceled the fuel tax increase. president macron made some promises on monday. why are you still protesting? >> because they're like one-tenth of what the french people are asking. >> reporter: so far, a few dozen arrest have been reported in paris. it's not yet clear why the numbers of protesters are so much lower this weekend. it could be because of president macron's concessions. the deadly attack in strasbourg earlier this week, or the frigid temperatures. michelle. >> roxana saberi, thank you. time to show you some of the other stories making news this morning. usa today reports special counsel robert mueller filed new
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court documents friday attempting to set the record straight about the fbi's interview with former national security adviser michael flynn. mueller said the interview was voluntary and lacked any indication of coercion. after flynn's team accused prosecutors of tricking him. prosecutors are recommending no prison time for flynn citing his significant cooperation. sentencing is set for tuesday. the denver post reports the fiancee of missing colorado mother kelsey berreth has not directly spoken to police. police say patrick frazee has only addressed them through his attorney. frazee is believed to be the last person to have seen berreth before she vanished on thanksgiving day. investigators obtained a warrant and are searching frazee's homeh he has not been identified as a suspect or a person of interest. frazee's attorney says his client is focused on caring for the child he shares with berreth. the wisconsin state journal
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reports depargt governor scott walker signed a package of lame duck bills friday that his critics say are designed to cut into the authority of his democratic successor. the changes will limit the power of wisconsin governor elect tony evers on economic development, lawsuits, and administrative rules. walker says the bills improve stability, transparency, and accountability to taxpayers. evers says he's reviewing his options but he didn't elob rate. facebook has fixed a bug which allowed outside access to the private photos of more than 6 million of its users. the company says the glitch gave some third-party apps more exposure than they should have. it's just the latest struggle facebook has had with consumer data. a breach in september gave of users. facebook has repeatedly pledged to better protect user information. and the straits times of singapore reports reports a community got an early and
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long-awaited christmas present. bells taken from a church more than a century ago by u.s. troops during the american war have been returned. the bells were seized as pay back for a surprise attack by filipinos in 1901 that killed 48 american soldiers. the bells are revered by filipinos as symbols of national pride. that's a nice gesture. >> but a hundred years? >> that's a long time. it's about 22 after the hour, now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. it may have put millions of people in danger. still ahead, the report of a potentially toxic ingredient and one company's baby powders that
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may have been hidden from the government and the public. plus, financial life support. many parents are finding their kids aren't becoming as independent as they'd like as fast as they planned for. hear about the heavy cost of this ongoing obligation and the best ways to handle it. and magic for -- an exhibit on the real world origins of harry potter was successful in the history of britain's national library. now it's opened here in the u.s. and we'll take you inside. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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they caught fire during the summer of love and included jimmy hendrix among their fans. but these all women rockers never recorded an album until now. we'll introduce you to ace of cups. plus, the world is their oyster. we'll meet a passionate group of high school students trying to clean up their environment with the help of a billion little friends. this is "cbs this morning: saturday."
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the award she won for the favorite in which she stars with emstone and rachel weisz have brought her career to another level. she's already won the best actress prize at the venice festival and the british independent film awards and she's been nominated for a golden globe. >> it's tiptoeing towards the big award. do you feel finally that you're getting the recognition that you've deserved all along or is it a big surprise to you? >> you didn't say finally that sounds horrendous. when you get nominated for something, for me it comes as an emassive prize and norm muss generally go, oh, it's really incredibly exciting and you
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can't quite believe. and in all honesty as a little girl, oh, if i ever won an oscar. >> oh, great, now she's crying. >> it's probably not something she imagined when she began her career doing comedy sketch shows. but her life is about to take another dramatic turn. she's been cast as the new queen elizabeth in the netflix mega series the crowne. claire foy has played the young queen until now, but as the saga develops and the queen ages, there's only so much makeup can do. so, it's olivia colman's turn again. >> apart from that, that's it. >> playing a living queen is a lot different than playing one who's been dead for 300 years. ♪ toyland, toyland
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♪ little girl and boy land ♪ while you dwell within it ♪ you are ever happy there daddy, it's christmas! ♪ childhoods, joyland never let go of your dreams. the mercedes-benz winter event is back. lease the glc 300 for $459 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing.
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>> are you guys okay? >> yes, i'm all right. >> unreal. there were fears that a bomb had gone off in los angeles on friday. it turned out a box truck had exploded on a road packed with rush-hour commuters. the driver and passenger were not hurt. a propane tank inside the truck exploded. police are trying to determine exactly why. >> amazing nobody got hurt in this. >> scary. one of the companies that suffered the biggest loss on friday's route on wall street was johnson and johnson. it plunged more than 10%, it's worst single day loss in more than 15 years after a new report
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claimed the company may have known for decades that its baby powder sometimes contained asbestos which can cause cancer. jim axelrod has the story. >> essentially my cancer terminal. >> reporter: her name is tony roberts. >> i wanted to spend time with my sons. i wanted to spend time with my grandchildren. >> reporter: she died of ovarian cancer in october. she was 61. roberts had used johnson and johnson's talcum powder products since she was a teenager and suspected asbestos in the powder had caused her cancer. while talc and asbestos often naturally occur in the earth, j&j has long denied the claim that it could be contaminated with the known carcinogen. but almost 10,000 lawsuits have been filed claiming the product does cause cancer. >> the question is, is there asbestos in johnson and johnson's products? we believe and have always believed that there isn't. >> reporter: but now reuters has examined documents that reveal
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the company knew about the presence of small amounts of asbestos in its products as far back as 1957 but did not disclose that to the public. ted meadows represents 13 plaintiffs that claim j&j talc products caused ovarian cancer. >> not only have they known about it, they've attempted to hide it from the public. that's exactly what they've been able to do for decades is hide this from the public. >> reporter: a jury awarded tony roberts and 21 other plaintiffs nearly $4.7 billion. but roberts wasn't focused on money at the end of her life. she was focussed on her grandchildren. >> and i have a new one coming in december and i'm probably not going to have the chance to even get to meet that one. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," this is jim axelrod in new york. >> how do you write this down in a report and then know it's a problem and not fix it? not fix it. >> that's the question, obviously. goes back to 1957 r they say. all right.
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it's an ambitious plan to clear pollution from one of the nation's busiest waterways. meet the team trying to place a billion oysters at the bottom of the new york harbor. but first here's a look at the weather for your weekend. from let tuesday lous t let, why this looks to be a record-breaking year for these advisories and some insight into the increase. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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it's become retune. a warning from the federal government about a food product that's suddenly considered a potential danger. on wednesday they warned of salmonella contamination linked to certain ground beef. last month it was e. coli in romaine lettuce traced to northern california. 2018 is already reported the highest number of multistate foodborne illness outbreaks in recent years.
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here to discuss this unapril advertisi -- unappetizing product. >> on the one hand, if you think that foodborne outbreaks are rising, you're right, they are. the number of foodborne outbreaks according to cdc has tripled since the mid 1990s. it's set a record in recent history this past year. but sometimes rising awareness doesn't mean rising underlying incidents. sometimes science technology gets better at discovering things that have existed anyway and our discovery of them makes it seem like they're more frequent. >> it's not necessarily a bad thing it's that we're catching it more often? >> that's right. i said the number of foodborne outbreaks has tripled in the 1990s. what happened then? they developed a technology called pulse net.
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that's a clearinghouse for foodborne contamination. so if johnny gets sick eating aburger in maryland and then sally gets sick eating a burger in oregon, then the doctors can send this information to the clearinghouse called pulse net, they can figure out the dna fingerprint of this and say we found an outbreak just after two instances. previously we needed maybe dozens of illnesses, several deaths before they could say we spotted an outbreak. >> so this has saved lives? >> it has. what's difficult to determine, though, is whether or not it's having an enormous impact. because the graph of foodborne illnesses and deaths isn't going straight up, it's stdo's kinof like a scatter plot. it's really,ig reahtlly spiky. last year was a really good year, a really low year for foodborne illnesses. i'm sorry, 2017 was. 2018 has bane record hieen a rer
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not just for the e. coli thing that we just heard about, but a lot of lettuce-borne dis diseases. it's great that very have the d cdc doing better detective work. >> i remember reading this book in school, had our illnesses changed? chaz th has it changed the way we go after this is a problem and we need to be on the lookout zblt 150-year history of the government trying to stop foodborne illnesses is a history of involvement. there was no such thing as the department of agriculture before 1862 when abraham lincoln started it and the first commissioner's name was isaac newton. no, not that one he had been dead for 140 years, but another equally smart agriculturalist. he was the first commissioner of the usda.
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it took a jungle to lead to conditions. they were much more active in terms of the way that we combat this now. a few years ago the obama administration said the detective work is pretty good but let's put regulations in place to stop contaminations before they start. we're more active but the ongoing fight against foodborne illnesses continues at pace. >> we have to leave it there. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> all right. ahead, parents make a lot of sacrifices for their kids, including financial ones. but lately that responsibility isn't ending at age 18 or anywhere near it. still ahead, the trend and hear advice on how to handle it. you're watching "cbs this morning." no matter what life throws down
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>> they have to get a bachelor's and a masters and then i will -- >> oh, wow. >> two degrees to get any of my -- >> so they're not in the wiover llsk. etba star>> t shaquille o'neal with his thoughts on financial support for his kids. one recent study found that 79% of parents in america do help out with living expenses for their adult children. but if that support continues for years, it can become a major financial drain, even upending a couple or an individual's efforts to save for their own retirement. barry peterson has the story. >> if you're like a lot of parents, this scene from the hbo series girls may hit a little too close to home. >> we can't keep bank rolling your groovy lifestyle. >> my groovy lifestyle? >> the bills add up. we're covering your rent, your insurance, your cell phone. >> you said it was cheaper for you if i was on the family plan. >> yeah. >> not so funny in real life where a third of young people 18
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to 34 still live at home and even many 30 or 40 somethings who are out of the house and seemingly on their own aren't. with more than three quarters of parents paying for things like groceries or cell phone bills, which is why parents spend $500 billion a year supporting adult children and only half that much saving for retirement. says a study by merrill lynch. >> i go back to ensuring that the family bank isn't bankrupted. >> where she works with clients on retirement. >> you know, if you get to a point where truly you're retirement savings or savings just in general is completely depleted to support your kids, ultimately your kids may actually have to provide financial support for you later on in life as well. >> a state planning attorney worries that propping up adult kids today hurts them tomorrow. >> you start to see adult children who are not being put into a position where they can
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be successful in their own right because they have a crutch, which is different than an opportunity. >> it's not really the kid's fault, it's the parents driving this process. >> the parents are the enablers. >> she tries to train her clients who are parents to talk to their kids about money the same way they teach about manners or good grades. >> so this basic understanding of what it is we call it adulting, you know, adulting is hard, what does it cost? >> also called growing up. >> yes. and their children maybe grown up far beyond their years. an atck say private wedge andas eadr r veviseenmoinm. d these kids learned earl that i in th-- early that in this fami they help pay their own way. >> you want to give but sometimes giving them isn't helping them. our job it is to help them not to do it for them. >> with kids, a life-long
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message in money and discipline can start with buying one box of oreos a month. >> you're welcome to eat them all tonight or you can allot them outnd a them last until the next time we go buy the next box of oreos. >> it isn't even about money, it's about a concept. >> it's a concept, yeah, of saving, of budgeting, of understanding that feeling of delayed gratification. >> when 16-year-old kyle wanted to buy the family car, he paid for it by maintaining a thousand dollars a year high school academic scholarship. >> i think the lesson was regardless of the money that if you work hard for something, then you will be rewarded whether it be by some physical thing or some emotional, you'll be rewarded for hard work. >> and he does part-time jobs for any extras. >> what if he runs out of gas money? >> well, that's going to be a bad day, right? >> nolan at 14 already knows his parents will only fund four years of college and after that, he's on his own.
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>> if my parents start us while we're young with the expectation that we have to work to get what we really want, that later in life we'll be able to prosper in that sort of environment. >> because you'll work for it? >> exactly. >> at 11, sophie is so financially farsighted she has already saving money for the apartment she will rent after college. so you don't feel like this is unfair to an 11-year-old? >> everybody's going to reach a challenge where they can't auhs. for help and they need to be able to do it by themselves. and by our parents making us grow up this way, it's going to help us overcome that more than somebody that just gets stuff. >> i think they'll have the intrinsic pride and motivation to deal with anything that gets thrown their way. >> wch means raising financially independent kids these days may be about teaching an old fashioned lesson. earn before you spend.
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for "cbs this morning: saturday," barry peterson, denver. >> an 11-year-old already saving for her after-college apartment is impressive, i have to say. >> so sophie. >> yeah. all right. from heavenly harmonies to heavy metal, meet the new class of induct tees in the rock-n-roll hall of fame. >> and don't forget to set your dvr to record this morning saturday. coming up we'll show you the foundation between the harry potter books an films plus "the dish" and some holiday music from j.d. mcpherson in our saturday session. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. ok everyone! our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition... for strength and energy! whoo-hoo! great-tasting ensure. with nine grams of protein and twenty-six vitamins and minerals. ensure. now up to 30 grams of protein for strength and energy! forget about vacuuming for weeks.
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xarelto® is selective, targeting just one critical factor. for afib patients well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® compares in reducing the risk of stroke. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of stroke. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. get help right away for unexpected bleeding or unusual bruising. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. before starting, tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures and any kidney or liver problems. learn all you can to help protect yourself from a stroke. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. more than 20 years after the jackson five were inducted into the rock-n-roll hall of fame, they'll be joined by their younger sister.
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janet jackson headlines the hall of fame's class of 2019 announced this week. already a hall of famer as a member of fleetwood mac, stevie knicks is the first woman to be inducted twice. this time as a soloist. ♪ stop dragging my heart around ♪ >> knicks reacted to the honor on twitter writing i have been in a band since 1968. to be recognized for my solo work makes me take a deep breath and smile. it's a glorious feeling. british rockers def leppard gained entry with the help of more than a half milonfr f two ofhe albums hysteria and pyromania reached diamond status in the u.s. selling more than 1illi cops apce.
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with a gothic look and longing lyrics, the cure churned out familiar hits like friday i'm in love and pictures of you. it was an eventful week for the cure, along with being added to the hall of fame, the band announced it's putting the finishing touches on its first album in more than a decade. radio head is the newest band to go in the hall of fame. the experimental rockers broke on the scene in 1993 with the grunge hit creep. but their sound has evolved over the course of nine studio albums. roxy music were prague rock pioneers who hit number one 3 times in the singer brian ferry and super producer brian evo. >> but it's too late to say you're sorry. >> but the langest wait to get into the hall of fame was for the zombies.
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as part of the british invasion, their 1968 album odyssey and oracle is ranked one of the greatest rock albums ever recorded. band members talked with us earlier this year about the album's unexpected success. >> it's incredible. yet it was totally ignored at the time. >> but it sells more now every year than it ever did in its first -- >> and they performed their biggest hit in our saturday session. ♪ it's the time of the season for loving ♪ >> loving. >> so happy for those guys. they were really lovely guys. they reunited about 15 years ago and are playing still. it's awesome j you g. >> you got to love it.
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>>if> dou y hogwarts museum, this is the next best thing. we'll discover the world of harry potter. that's coming up next. did she talk about the dynamics she would have faced? >> absolutely. when she was starting out she was, you know, she was working in a system that didn't want her there, you know. they were like why are you hear? you should be at home in the kitchen. so she was, would constantly against the status quo. and what's fascinating about her is how she harnessed this anger and this frustration that she felt and she turned it into something very positive. and then event wally managed to completely change the system and the laws to make the world fairer for all of us. >> there's a great scene in the movie about not wanting her there. she's at harvard law school and the professor says to you will at women in the room, please explain why you deserve to be here instead of a man. that really happened? >> yeah, that was absolutely true, yeah, absolutely verbatim. i mean, you can't quite believe
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it that that was happening. but it's just exactly what happened every step of the way. she was in the minority of very few women with, you know, with hundreds of men. so from the very beginning she has really had to fight. >> yeah. >> she's -- and continues to do so. >> and not to take away from any of her own achievements and her own fight, but you touched on this earlier. i think she'd probably be the first to say that none of this would have been possible without marty, right, and her husband's support there and not only love, but his faith and confidence in what she could achieve. >> absolutely. and i think that's what's so special about their relationship is that it shows how men and women can work together. and actually we all rise together and just how important that is. but, yeah, there was a deep, deep affection. we would watch early videos, home videos of them and them on their honeymoon and you could just see there's such joy in their eyes.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason with michelle miller andes dees. a -- adriana diaz. coming up, you've heard about the private efforts of exploring space. this team is going the other way. see how they're reaching depths with a goal of exploring a famous lost liner. >> and they're also at work beneath the waves. we'll meet students trying to clean up local waters by bringing back the billions of oysters that once called them home. plus, back in the '60s they performed on the same bills as the grateful dead, jefferson airplane and the band, but they never recorded an album until now. meet what many consider to be
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the first all-female rock band still making music half a century later. that's ahead. >> but first, our top story this hour, a federal judge in texas ruled that president obama's affordable care act is lastight's dision said the cotullunnsal passed lasttion year. knocked the constitutional foundation from under obamacare by eliminating a penalty for not having health coverage. >> after the decision, president trump tweeted that congress should pass a new law to protect coverage for people with preexisting conditions. basically care will remain in place while appeals proceed. now for some perspective on this and other developments, we turn to bob cusack, editor and chief of the hill. good morning. >> morning. >> on its face it seems as though this is a big win for the white house, but i'm curious, you know, in the midterm elections the affordable care act was a big issue. could this possibly back fire on the republicans? >> it could.
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legally as you mention huge win for republicans, but not all republican they don't agree with this lawsuit. so politically this is a problem for republican leaders because now all the sudden obamacare is actually popular compared to years ago. so this is a problem for republican leaders, how they handle this and now democrats you saw all the press releases last night going on the offensive saying they're going to join this lawsuit and try to help overturn it. we're probably headed to the supreme court on this. >> as we saw already the president's making a pitch or at least an open claim saying he wants to fix this preexisting condition problem. is there the possibility that republicans and democrats can come to together on something like this? >> think there's a chance, it's slim to none. >> that's no chance. >> they can't agree on immigration and funding the government, i don't think they can agree on any type of legislative solution for healthcare. >> you don't think the democrats will want to help them here? >> i think that they want to help, but at the same time i just think it's too
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deviolationsive. moving to mick mulvaney, this seemed like the job nobody wanted. what do you know about his temperament and how he might manage the president which was difficult for his predecessors? >> he has a good working relationship with the president. like other republicans before the president was elected he did criticize the president publicly. however, he's working at the budget office now. remember he's not resigningjob,. so i think it's kind of a win/win for the white house and mulvaney. he's a conservative and he likes to keep government spending under control. trump really doesn't want to tackle those type of issues, at least not in a first term. so there's the rub. this is one of the toughest jobs normally and in the trump administration it's the toughest job possibly ever. >> let's move on to the mueller investigation. and now michael cohen has come out swinging. president trump came back and said, you know, did i do no wrong. >> yeah. >> and then cohen doubled down. >> it's interesting the timing of mueller. remember before thanksgiving
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mueller got the written answers from trump's team and then all of a sudden we see this massive michael cohen news and how he's talking to mueller. so maybe that was to get, okay, let's get you in writing first and then get all the dirt from michael cohen. the president has had in this investigation i think a rough couple of weeks. manafort lying to mueller was a setback for mueller. but now there have been a lot of people now who have flipped on trump and he's got to be nervous about that. >> we'll see what happens. thank you so much, bob. >> thank you. tomorrow morning on face the nation here on cbs margaret brennan's guests will include ern miepll, lannyr adviser he at davis former attorney to michael cohen who was president trump's former personal lawyer. thrill seekers and history lovers could soon get front row seats to treasures, even historical remains deep under the sea. our own david begnaud has that story. >> reporter: far from the fridge
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inch north atlantic waters that claim the titanic, a 2019 mission to reach the ill fated ocean liner reached a major milestone this week in the bahamas. for months, ocean gates team of scientists and explorers have been depth testing their privately-built, man submersible. it's called titan and it's off the coast of abbaco island. they needed the sub to reach 13,000 feet. that's the depth to reach the titanic's wreck site. on monday, stockton rush got there. becoming only the second person ever to reach that depth solo. the other person, was titanic director james cameron. >> i was so busy in the sub when i got down there that i didn't appreciate it until i started to come back up. and as i came to the sur realized that i had accomplished this amazing thing, it was just a great moment of joy. >> the ten-ton sub capable of carrying five people launches from a specially built platform
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that was designed to sink below the waves releasing titan into deeper waters. >> i can't express what that has meant to me and what it means to imagine the great things we're going to explore and find in the ocean in the years to come. >> the achievement not only opens up 50% of the ocean to private-manned exploration, also it paves the way for survey expeditions to titanic's last days and map the wreck andrin field. researchers and explorers will be able to join ocean gates expeditions for a fee, $100,000. that's the inflation adjusted price of a first-class ticket in 1912. >> we expect to survey the titanic over many years. it's a gigantic site and we want to collect as much data as possible before it decays into the ocean. >> the first of ocean gate's schedule expeditions to the titanic run from june to august of 2019. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm david begnaud.
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>> who's buying a ticket? >> that's so exciting what they're doing. i would love to go down there? >> really? >> yeah, i would. >> you just need $100,000. >> you're good. >> oh well, i'll stay up here. it's about seven minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. it's a tall order, 1 billion oysters. but they're not to eat. we'll take you inside an incredible school project cleaning up new york's waterways with the help of some ambitious students and their little friends. >> little friends. >> your little friends too. >> you're watching "cbs this >> you're watching "cbs this morninat
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just off the southern tip of manhattan on new york's governor's island an unprecedented program is underway to restore new york harbor's once bountiful oyster population. and the environmental benefits they bring. it's called the billion oyster project. what's more amazing, it's an effort launched by students at the new york harbor school. >> filmmakers followed their progress for a year to create the discovery channel documentary take back the harbor premiering on tuesday. here's a preview. >> going up in the barnside they didn't know about the harbor. i got to know about thear i go >> new york harbor used to be amazing. dolphins, used to be seen in new york harbor frequently and whales.
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>> we had sea horses that we were able to see from the water. we had seals. we had oifters thysters that yok down on the peer and grabt ithe >> oysters were made the hudson river and w the eastt ri such a hub of life. oysters also they filter like 50 gallons a day of water. it's a lot of water. and that's per oyster. >> sure is a lot of water. joining us now are the documentary's codirector critty jacobson and harbor school graduate brian campbell. good morning to you both. glad you're here. i know you had to get up extra early for an 18-year-old. he's still like what's happening? so, christi, tell us how you got involved and interested in this. >> yeah, well a colleague of ours at discovery had heard a little piece on the radio about the harbor school. and my codirector roger ross
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williams and i arrived to check it out and met brian among other students and just when we saw them literally in action saving the harbor, it just felt like it was something we -- a story we needed to tell. >> and you spent an entire year shooting this. >> yeah, yeah. so what we did is we filmed over a school year but it's also l thyef oteik restoration. a lot of different work can happen in the summer, obviously in the water, diving under the water in the winter, and we filmed some pretty major re, fs being installed in the water. >> i understand you vetoed your mom on going to the harbor hoolscd a t>>ra sdiheti donal lawyer, doctor, so i was a rebel and i kind of just said, no, i'm going to harbor it kind of worked out. >> how did ydou know about s whn they were doing?
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>> so i didn't know about, like, too much into it. the founder of the school came to visit my high school and i was like i'm going to put it down. i put it down as my last choice and i wounded up getting in and i liked it. >> what have you been doing with the oysters. >> basically we transport the oift aries well as other students in agriculture and more hands-on with the oysters to the reef site. but he also do safety and navigation so we know how to get there and everything. >> he was driving the boats that he were with filming on. >> why was the oyster population deplooet depleted and how are you able to repopulate? >> the new york harbor was once the oyster capital of the world. we ate them like crazy. we polluted the waters, and we dredged, you know, so bigger ships could come through. and all of those things decimated the oyster population. when this project started,
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liking some like four years ago, there were almost zero oysters in the harbor. and today, thanks to the work of brian and the other students of the oyster project, there's 28 million and growing. >> wow. to be clear, we are not too eat these oysters, right? >> that's a good point. >> definitely not. specifically bred for like clean up the harbor and filtering and plus you want want to eat an oyster that's -- >> but one day. >> why are oysters so important? what do they do? >> so they filter the wourt. -- water. >> an extraordinary amount. >>ing some like. >> 50 gallons a day. >> 50 gallons a day. they also provide storm protection. that's a really important role thathey tan>> p yyh.la >>er aend then also as the reef build, as they get created, it creates a happen at that time for other underwater life. so they'ressenal ryeall chal
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tg the harbor. >> i lived in new york and did not know. >> didn't know until we saw that has b octcl. n,>> i hasn'tbr been hiaard at because you have everybody guiding you. it's a big goal so you kind of have your doubts sometimes. but i no we're going to get there. >> it's exciting what you're doing. brian campbell, thank you so much. christi jacobson, really interesting doc. remember you can see take back the harbor this coming tuesday, december 19th on the discovery channel. christi, brian, thanks again for coming in. one rock group may set the record for the time between their first gig and their first album. up next, we'll talk to the members of the ace of cups. one of the first all-women rock bands with a debut collection more than 50 years in the making. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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san francisco's late '60s music scene was defined by acts like the grateful dead, janice joplin, and jefferson airplane. while their music remains popular to this day, one band of four groundbreaking women from that era is getting a second chance 50 years later. john blackstone has their story. >> reporter: san francisco's hate ashbury intersection made famous during the summer of love is more than just a memory for the four women posing under the iconic street signs. in 1965 at an apartment around the corner, they started playing music together. as the ace of cupnl-rl rock band, denise coffman, mary gannon, lead guitar rift mary
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ellen sifrp son and drummer. 50 years ago they were right a the center of san francisco's exploding music scene. pr petntromi neoh, yeah. e >> with bill graham and the avalon. >> seeing janice being backstage. >> so backstage with janice joplin, sharing the stage with what other groups? >> jefferson airplane. >> the band santana and jimmy hendrix. >> so there you were on the same stage with jefferson airplane and jimmy hendrix. what happened? >> well, first of all we didn't get a record deal at that time. and that was sort of the next step for us and it was the same step that our brother bands were taking. and if you didn't record, you never got a fan base farther away in your local situation. so then you didn't really get to tour. so all of those things that would have been part of the next step never really happened for
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us. >> half a century later, they finally have a record deal. they're back together all well into their 70s. but it seems like the '60s all over again when they start to play. ♪ feel good >> their performance raises the mystery of why they were never offered a record deal so long ago. did that next step not come because you were a girl band? >> maybe once of the aspects of it. >> i would say that. >> and then we started having children and we really couldn't afford to, you know, go on the road. it was -- just got harder. ♪ well i'm on the road again >> songs they'd written and performed like on the road gathered dust as they each went on to other lives. >> well, i had all the usual suspect jobs of waitressing. >> i became a substance abuse cons letter. >> and i ended up taking my
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personal practice, which was yoga, and that became a provision or livelihood for me for some years. >> became a house cleaner. >> mostly gardening. i had these -- i moved to l.a. to go to music school. i went back to school in my 50s and got my diploma for special ed. >> started playing in top 40 bands. >> became an emergency medical technician. ♪ i got my compass and my dream ♪ >> i've got my compass and my dream, i mean, have you had the dream that you have today? ha ye ys?ou >> well, i think we always wanted to share the music. i know for me it felt like i didn't ever think that would really happen, that the music that we had written together would actually find its way to the world. i thought it was, you know, that we would kind of treasure it but it would be like having little children that never got to go out, you know.
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>> the ace of cups! >> reporter: seven years ago the ace of cups was asked to perform at a birthday celebration for summer of love personality wavy gravy. ♪ stale be standing on their own without a house they can call their own ♪ >> a young record producer was in the audience and he decided it was time 0 correct an oversight from so long ago. the ace of cups first recorded album on high moon records has just been released with some of the old songs and many new ones reflecting the lives they've lived. >> but now of course we've been through a lot, motherhood and all raising teenagers, so the songs are a little bit more biting. but there's a lot of new songs. it's like i'm not going to sing about why'd you leave me, babe? i'm over here in a bar waiting by myself because i'm not doing that and those days are over. and it's okay. i don't want to do that anymore.
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>> reporter: when you listen to that now, when you look at the film of you performing, are you amaze add the at what you did at a tender age? >> it was just life. it what was we were doing. >> reporter: you were going to tell me what your family thinks of this. >> they're both just thrilled beyond -- >> you were famous. >> yeah. i mean, i didn't talk a lot to them about what happened back then. i think a lot of kids don't know what their mothers were doing, you know. >> thank heavens. >> reporter: the us a of cups is planning a tour next year. they'll be performing old songs from a new perspective. >> but it's funny when you're at this age in your career, like say if we were in our 20s, i always think it's a blessing that we didn't get a recording contract. i don't think i'd be here now. i would do anything then, you know, that was maybe destructive or whatever. you know, now that i'm 75, it's like i can see how things are. ♪ does it feel good, baby?
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ee el t>> repormeter:l for "cbs thi morning" jury john blackstone, san francisco. >> i'm glad they're still here and we finally got an ace of cups record. >> and they have such strong vocals, man. >> yes. and can we just say how great it to see john blackstone who's actually retired but left with us that piece? >> i know. >> so great. >> and we miss him already. >> we do. chris definitely does, his producer. >> yeah. well, the world of wizards didn't begin with harry potter. magical folklore has a long history and some of it influenced author j.k. raw creations. we'll take you to a specific introduction to the topic next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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rowli . some relimg johns you have to pray three times a day thepy od oc what are you praying about? >> thank you for this house you're letting me l in. oh my gosh i love itiv.e i don't preach. i try to live by example. i'm not perfect. i'm a little renegade a lot of times. i like to have a drink of whiskey. but'm eye good person anda good not to hurt anybody's feelings. >> about that renegade, let's talk about the red dress. how did the red dress become such a big deal? >> well, sandy made it for me and she had netting right here
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on my chest. and i looked down and i said, whoa, that's pretty bare. she said i'm going to fill it all in with sequins and stuff. finish singing the song, daddy looks at me and says reba, did you have that dress on backwards? i'm like, why? and mama said, it was low. it's the lowest thing i've ever seen you wear. >> i'm okay to touch it? >> absolutely. >> the dress became a staple at reba's live shows wearing it often enough to wear it out. how many times have you wore this dress? >> couple of years on concert. >> like a hundred times? >> oh, yeah. >> she put it ton agaon again e this year for the academy of country music awards. 25 years later and heard it didn't need to be altered at all. >> no. >> nobody else is the same size 25 years later, reba. >> well, as i told everybody, it's stretchy material.
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you're a wizard, harry. >> i'm a what? >> a wizard. and a thumping good one i'd wager. >> #this is going to be fun. it's been just over 20 years since the u.s. was first introduced to the world's most famous wizard. and harry potter empire is still gr you probably know all about the books, theowin films, plays, an even a theme park. but now even libraries and museums are coming under the spell. we visitsed the new exhibit at the new york historical society where curator roberta oislson showed us the true magic at the
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heart of harry potter. >> welcome to hogwarts. i'm so excited that you're here. see harry potter. >> that hisdry began with j.k. rowling, an unknown, unestablished single mom put her imagination to paper and penned one of the best-selling series of all time. with a half billion books sold worldwide in more than 80 languages, what's discovered at this exhibit inside the walls of the new york historical society is a fiction series based on historical fact. >> she took things that she had chanced upon in used book shops and she used that as her sort of touch stone. and she jumped off to create this incredible universe which has illusions to other things. >> take, for example, the elusive character nicholas flamel.
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>> this is the tombstone of nicholas flamel. >> ways real guy? >> he was an actual person who lived in paris and he died and was buried and they opened his tomb there was nothing there and it led to the whole legend that he was an alcomist and he had discovered the secret of life, the elixir of life. >> here it is, nicholas flamel is the only known maker the sorcerer's stone. >> which was the title of. >> the first book. >> that first book might never have seen the light of day if not for this book review by a young alice newton. >> after eight publishers and refuser, j.k. rowling submitted to bloomberg press. and nigel gave is it to his 8-year-old daughter alice and this is her book review. she said this is the most wonderful book i've ever read and the contract came the next day. >> a short time later the manuscript landed in america in the lap of david sailor. a creative director at
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children's publishing giant scholastic. >> when you were reading it, were you thinking this has long lasting appeal? >> it felt like a class toik me as -- classic to me as ways reading it. and that's why i wanted the book to feel like a class whik you were holding it in your hands. but i don't think any of us knew it would be such an incredible success and that it would take off the way that it would. >> the film releases catapulted the popularity of the brand even higher making his job that much harder. >> everyone is badgering you, your nieces, nephews, friends, everyone at work wants to know what's happening with the book. but you have to keep it a secret and i have to say i i remember when the devil wears prada came out and there was a moment in the story where the editor wanted to get a copy of the book for her kids. >> we have all the published harry potter books, they want know what happens next. >> you nt watt unpublished man scripted? >> and i was watching that because it was a good joke, but ways like no one got a hold of
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that manuscript. they were kept in saves and the safes. for that, sailor relied on the artistry of mary grand prix. she sent her ideas via fax. >> fax? >> in the olden days, yeah, when the fax machine paper used to just run and in rolls and we'd find it on the floor later on. >> including the of an early offering for an american working title. >> it's called harry potter and the school of magic, which was another title that we were thinking about at the time which was not a good title. >> but sailor's prized possession is this sketch of serious black from the third book, harry potter and the prisoner of askuban given to him by the artist herself. >> why serious. >> i'm actually the signature the serious black in the books,
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and there's my signature right there. pwith the works of three other artists hang throughout the exhibit, a journey across continents and across time. that's both educational and interactive. >> oh my gosh. >> oh my goodness. >> what's the best piece of history learned here? >> that there are new things under the sun, that there are always new things and old things, and that the interplay of objects and ideas is everlasting, ever unfolding. it's like a kaleidoscope. you turn it, it's always different. and that is magic. >> that is magic. harry potter and a his tritory magic continues until january the 27th. >> i love the historical society, they're my neighbors. if you're in town you should visit. >> i can't believe it's 20 years. my inner geek was freaking out.
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>> inner geek. >> me too. >> i hope david sailor at scholastic was handsomely rewarded for putting those books out. now here's a look at the -- we'll have less fun now in the next section to come. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. he quit his day job to if a dream. he took a chance on indian food to see if it would follow him the hills of north carolina. it was a bet that paid off. you'll meet him next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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with the roomba robot vacuum. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes to clean all your floors. and with patented dirt detect technology, roomba finds dirt throughout your home. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. let's go. nutella is sure to bring a smile to breakfast time. get free decorating tools inside nutella holiday jars. i got beaten within an inch of my life [ grunts ]was different. it's a hate crime. so, i created a world where i could be anyone i want. this is hoagie, kind of a braver versions of me. we're one in the same pal. i walk in your shoes. ♪ i got dreams in my head... ♪ you need to face those jerks who beat you up. t his.
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if i can be a hero, so can you. i'm at this wing joint telling people that geico has been offering savings for over 75 years. that's longer than the buffalo wing's been around. dozen wings. and did you know that geico... (lips smacking) offers mo... (coughing) motorcycle insurance? ho-ho... my lips are burning. (laughs) ah... no, my lips are actually burning. geico. over 75 years of savings and service. see how much you could save at geico.com. it's too hot. oh, this is too hot, mate. it's too hot. irobot has your everyday whatsolution.mess, roomba vacuums up dry debris and pet hair throughout your home. and for wet messes, say hello to the braava jet mopping robot. its precision jet spray and vibrating cleaning head loosen and scrub stains from your hard floors. braava jet is designed to navigate kitchens, bathrooms and even those hard to reach places. so you can enjoy cleaner floors
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and a fresher home everyday. you, roomba and braava jet from irobot. better together. they declare love at to get. first sniff. dogs love more, because they are more. let's treat them that way. milk-bone. doing more for dogs since 1908. this morning on "the dish," a chef known for change the perception of indian cuisine in america. raised in india, he came to the u.s. to earn an mba buff course he missed the spicy kwa seeccui his homeland so he decided to cook it himself. he started in california but always dreamed of running his own restaurant. >> in 2009 he took the plunge with his wife and business partner moving to asheville,
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north carolina, and opening chai uponn poney. it was a big hit. he's a three-time james beard award nominee and this summertime magazine named him one of 31 people changing the south. >> that's big. >> that is big. chef, welcome to the dish. good morning. >> good morning. >> and this table. >> oh. >> wow. >> can't wait to dig in. >> tell us what's here. >> well there are say combination indian street food which is what we serve in our restaurant called chut. and that means eat with your hands and lick. it's made up of multiple components, almost like a meat and three, but you're talking about a meat and eight. >> i love oaka rah. >> oak contract fridakra. we've got callie, so that's
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mustard greens cooked with mustard seed. .hat's a malabar chicken curry it's a little mill rrk lime, and mustardutocon seeds. that's lintels, rice, and some of the street food components. that's a dish we refer to in the restaurant as a sloppy joe or a sloppy joe actually. and that's made with ground lamb and that's bun in a par seed style. and last over in the corner is something called corn hail. >> and this. >> this is the poney. what i tried do was make a drink that wasn't just a western-style drink that was modified to the indian. but thaw that's liqueur, cilantro and per seko and lime. >> let's cut to the chase here. you were born in london. >> yeah. >> raised in india. >> yeah. >> and then educated in the u.s. >> i'm what they call a culinary mutt, yes. >> that has got to be culture shock all the way around. >> yeah. moving from england to india i
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was 4. but i grew one english as my first language if you stop and think about it. so i came to india almost as an immigrant even though i was indian and had to learn how to speak the language. i was in a very small town in india. but one of the big influences in my life and the reason i ended up in america was there was a huge western sort of influx of pilgrims that would come there to visit a spiritual asham. and my great aunt ran a bed and breakfast where we put up these restaurants. so from an early age ways exposed to western food, movies, culture and i grew up with an affinity for america as a kid in the small town in america than i did as an indian. >> so when you got to the u.s. for grad school and you got to -- was it south carolina? >> south carolina. >> what kind of culture shock was there that ifny? >> -- if any. >> well, first i landed in new york. and that was everything i thought it would be from the
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movies. the next stop was south carolina. i thought good god where i have landed? i've been there. >> it's a good place. it was a good place. >> i was there to study, but of course i missed my food. >> yeah. >> so the first place i went to was an indian restaurant thinking i'd get the food that i got back home. >> in a sprip mall. >> -- strip mall. >> and wads everything that they looked like in the '90s. spicy curry buffet with a food i didn't grow up eating. >> but this journey has a large diversion because you end up now the san francisco in a brokerage, then you sell high-end aublds and thtomobiles estate and then the recession hits and you decide to open this restaurant. >> yeah. i was doing what i thought i was supposed to do. wear a suit and time tie and go to work every day. but i just kept railing against the state of indian food in america if the almost offended by sensibilities that we weren't eating what i grew up eating and
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i knew how fantastic it was. >> i could go on and on or actually i could listen to you go on and on. but we need you to sign our dis >> absolutely. >> and as you do this, can you tell success there anyone past or present that kwoyou'd like t share this meal with? >> i knew you'd ask this question. >> we do every work. >> most people don't know i'm a bit of a nerd, science nerd, so i'd say if bill nigh the science guy is out there and would love to sit down with me at the table, i'd love to talk to him. >> well thank you so much. and, for more on this, head to our website at cbsthismorning.com. >> that's the name of the show. next in our saturday session, singer song ride are jd mrk mcpherson. his holiday album was listed by esquire as the ten recent christmas albums that rule. he'll perform from it just ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday." a
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on teeth, tongue, cheeks and gums for 12 hours. so you're totally ready for that big moment. colgate total. be totally ready for life. is your floor's best friend. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes to grab and remove pet hair. and the roomba filter captures 99% of dog and cat allergens. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. hey! you still thinking about opening your own shop? every day. i think there are some ways to help keep you on track. and closer to home. edward jones grew to a trillion dollars in assets under care, by thinking about your goals as much as you do. a lot will happen in your life. wrinkles just won't. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair's derm-proven retinol works so fast, it takes only one week to reveal younger looking skin.
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this morning a special holiday edition of our saturday
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sessions from an artist rolling stone calls timeless. jd mcpherson was born in oklahoma and took up the guitar at age 13. his 2012 debut signs and signifiers cracked billboard's top 50 rock albums chart. he just released his first holiday collection of all original music entitled socks. now performing all the gifts i need here is jd mcpherson. ♪ happiness is automatic ♪ there's music in the air ♪ brab the boxes from the attic ♪ ♪ and haul them down the stairs ♪ ♪ freezing weather's round the corner ♪ ♪ and everybody knows
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♪ soon the tree will be all lit up ♪ ♪ sparkling as it glows ♪ today's anything but the same old thing ♪ ♪ i can almost hear those sleigh bells ring ♪ ♪ singing all those happy songs ♪ ♪ take a real quick look around and suddenly i see ♪ ♪ it's not even christmas yet, i got all the gifts i need ♪ ♪ runnin' round in plaid pajamas and slippers on our feet ♪ ♪ mama takes that photograph while we all talk through our teeth ♪ ♪ sugar cookies in the oven ♪ shaped like tiny trees ♪ stealing goodies by the dozen ♪ ♪ and making memories ♪ today's anything but the same
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old thing ♪ ♪ i can almost hear those sleigh bells ring ♪ happy songs ♪ ♪ while the bill ones all dance and suddenly i see ♪ ♪ it's not even christmas yet, i got all the gifts i need ♪ ♪ got caught hanging the mistletoe ♪ ♪ somebody stole a little kiss ♪ i ain't tied a single bow ♪ but i can already cross love off my list ♪ ♪ take a real quick look and suddenlyund i a see ♪ ♪ it's not even christmas yet, i got all the gifts i need ♪ ♪ i take a real quick look around and suddenly i see ♪ ♪ it's not even christmas yet, i got all the gifts i need ♪
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don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from jd mcpherson. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." forget about vacuuming for weeks. the (new) roomba i7+ with clean base automatic dirt disposal empties the roomba bin for you. so dirt is off your hands. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. ♪ ♪ i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week
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to activate my body to release it, like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it comes in a once-weekly, truly easy-to-use pen. and it works 24/7. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you're allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite. these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. to help lower my a1c i choose trulicity to activate my within.
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ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. music from jd mcpherson. say hello to the braava jet mopping robot from irobot. its precision jet spray and vibrating cleaning head loosen and scrub stains. all while navigating kitchens, bathrooms and those hard to reach places. you and braava jet from irobot. better together. we open up in the forest.rcial, i'm out in the wild eating my breakfast. raccoon come up and says, "are those bigger patties?" i said, "yep, fits on a biscuit."
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have a great weekend. we leave you with hey skinny santa. ♪ hey skinny santa, how's it looking ♪ ♪ that 32 waistline ♪ you better get cooking ♪ we need a big santa ♪ it's almost christmas time ♪ first stop, where he gotta get to chicago ♪ ♪ the secret to the pizza there is in the dough ♪ ♪ italian beef with gee ar dinner ra hot and sweet ♪
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♪ pop a pole lib sausage on maxwell street ♪ ♪ windia city popping corn with carmel and cheese ♪ ♪ adds a couple notches to his belt with ease ♪ ♪ we gotta get some gum bow in nola ♪ ♪ santa needs a pot of craw fish ♪ ♪ a friday oyster poe boy and nice ♪ ♪ fill him up with beg nets and a box of pray liens ♪ ♪ hey, mister santa ♪ how's it looking ♪ that 42 waistline ♪ you better get cooking ♪ we need a big santa ♪ it's almost christmas time ♪ i never thought i'd see a skinny old saint nick ♪
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♪ it's mid-december santa, better bulk up quick ♪ ♪ hit up every donut shop r a hundred dozen ♪ ♪ that's just enough to keep the big man running ♪ ♪ hey, mister santa ♪ how it looking ♪ that 52 waistline ♪ you better get cooking ♪ we need a big santa ♪ it's almost christmas time ♪ beat it down low over memphis town ♪ ♪ find his favorite barbecue and pass it around ♪ ♪ biscuits, grits andgraphiy and some chow chow too ♪ ♪ fried green tomatoes for the reindeer crew ♪ ♪ chicken wings, mac-n-cheese, some butter milk pie ♪ ♪ puts the old sparkle back in santa's eye ♪ ♪ hey, big santa ♪ how's it look ♪ that 99 waistline ♪ you better get cooking ♪ we got a big santa ♪ it's almost christmas time
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♪ it's almost christmas time ♪ it's almost christmas time [ applause ] >> whew hoo for those of you still with us. we have more music from jk mcpherson. >> this is clause versus clause featuring luss sillious. ♪ mrs. klas, mrs. klaus, tell me what is wrong with you ♪ ♪ i'm seeing all those dirta looks from way across the room ♪ ♪ it makes it hard to concentrate on teddy bears and roller skates ♪ ♪ can't you have see i'm working here ♪ ♪ there's so much to do ♪ i've got a feeling shuffle list ♪ ♪ i'm rolling up my sleeves
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♪ it's time to make that yearly trip they call it christmas eve ♪ ♪ mr. klas, mr. klas, i really hope you know ♪ ♪ you're not the only jolly that's running this north pole ♪ ♪ fix the -- pick up the slack ♪ you never tell me thank you ♪ and you barely say hello ♪ i guess i ride it up to here ♪ i really do believe when you finally fly the coop come this christmas eve ♪ ♪ what happens to the christmas is ♪ ♪ making toys and having a ball ♪ ♪ now it leaves the good old days have disappeared ♪ ♪ from the -- in the
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now on kpix news. a federal judge strikes down the affordable health care as unconstitutional. the question now, what does that mean for the millions of people that depend on it. >> plus michelle obama addressing a sold-out crowd in san jose. a public warning to stay away from bay area beaches this weekend. it is just about 6:00 on this saturday, december 15th. good morning and thank you for joining us. the roughest surf in almost two years expected to hit this weekend. on sunday the waves on the northern california coast can

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